Automobile glare shield



May 6 1924.

G. H. REIMER AUTOMOBILE GLARE SHIELD FiledV May 1'7 1922 W .m M

Patented May 6, 19274.

UNITED STATES lPATENT orner..

H. REIMER. OF FULTON, ILLINOIS, lASSIG'NOR, TO PATENT NOVELTY COMPANY,

F FULTON, ILLINOIS, A CORPORATION OF'ILLINOIS.

@AUTOMOBILE GLARE SHIELD.

Application filed May 17, 1922. Serial No. 561,609.

To all whom it may concern; n

Be it known that I, GEORGE-H. REIMER, a citizen of the United States, and resident .of

Fulton, Whiteside County, Illinois, have lnvented a certain new and useful Improvement in Automobile Glare Shields, of which the following is a s eciication.

This invention re ates to automobile glare shields of that kind in which a section'of translucent or semi-transparent materlal,

such as a sheet of green celluloid, isprovided with means for attaching the device to the windshield of a'vehicle, in front of the driver, so that the glare of headli hts coming toward the lvehicle will be mo ied and made less disagreeable to thedriver, masmuch as the device is hung on the windshield in such position that the driver looks through it toward the road and the machines coming in the opposite direction.

Generally stated, the object of the mvention is to provide a novel and improved construction whereby a glare shield of this kind may be conveniently 'hung in different positions on the frame of the wind-shield, in a simple and convenient maner, without the necessity 0f using screws orother similar fastening means, whereby the device 1s not supported on the glass or transparentportion of the wind-shield, but entirely on the frame thereof, as will hereinafter more fully appear.

To these and other useful ends the invention consists in matters hereinafter set forth and claimed and shown in the accompanying drawings in which- Figure 1 is a perspective of the front portion of an automobile showing the windshield thereof provided with a glare shield embodying the principles of the invention.

Fi re 2 is a perspective of said glare shielil Figure 3 is a side elevation or edge view of sald glare shield.

As thus illustrated, the invention ccmprises, preferably, a sheet of translucent material 1, such as green, celluloid, or some semi-trans arent material which is preferably lexiblle and not liable to break. The sheetmetal mounting or body portion 2 comprises a single piece of sheet metal pressed into shape to form a rectangular space sur.- rounded by the beador pressed out ridge 3, and holes are made in the end portions of this rectangular space portion to permit the insertion of rivets 4 by which to secure the mounting to the sheet 1 ot material previously mentioned. The upper edge of the mounting or long strip 2 is provided with parallel attaching portions or tabs 5 spaced apart and formed in the manner shown, which extends at right angles to the strip, so that when finished the entire glare shield is practically fiat and can be easily shipped by express or even sent through the mails in an envelope. The rectangular space surrounding the ridges 3 can be utilized for advertising purposes if'so desired. The flexible material 1 is unrestrained everywhere except where perforated for the rivets 4, at its upper edge. Thus the whole thing is flat and flexible in an envelope, and the sheet may also conform by flexing to any place or posltion where it is used. i

In use the attaching portions 5 are simply bent over they frame of the wind-shield, at any convenient point on the wind-shield, as, for example, shown in Figure 1 of the drawings. When thus attached, the glare shield can be moved from one side of the vehicle to the other, according to the position of the driver, and will shield the eyes of the driver against the glare from headli hts of machines coming in the opposite dlrection. As wind-shields are made in different ways, it will be possible, by means of the exible attaching ortions', to attach the device in many di erent ways.A As thus constructed, the device is simple and very inexpensive to manufacture, and is at the same time serviceable and entirely efective for the purpose intended.

While the glare shield is shown as being used on the windshield of an automobile, it will be understood that the invention can be used in any suitable position, or in any suitable manner, for the purpose of dimmin the light of the lamp of an automobile, an for this purpose may behung on any suitable support.

Obviously the sheet material 1, being Celluloid, is ilexible and resilient, but the. sheet metal portions 5 are iexible but nonresilient in order to retain their shape when bent into hookl form as shown in Fig. 3 of the drawin s.

What I c aim as my invention is- 1. A exible glare shield for windshields, embodyin a Hat sheet of exible and resilient trans ucent material having attached to 110' oneedge a pair of spaced thin flat metallattacliingtabs extending upward substantially in the plane of the sheet and being spaced apart and constructed of malleable or saft metal to thereby permit the device to be mailedflat and "hereb)v the user, by means of his fingers alone. is enable to bend each tab into the desired Yhook form for engagement with theredge ot' the Windshield that is to serre as a'support for the glarel shield, said sheet of translucent material being flexible so that. it may bend in an envelope while being transmitted through the mails? but being resilient in order that it may return to its normal flat condition, when bent out ot's'hape` and said attaching means being constructed in a manner to permit mailing inia flat condition in an ordinary envelope, embodying a flat sheet. of flexible and resilient translucent. material'having projecting from one edge thereof a straight attaching member extending substantially in the plane of the sheet and formed of material which can be easily bent over a support Without tools and that will inherently retain the shape into which it is bent. Said sheet of translucent material being flexible so that it may bend in an envelope while being transmitted through the mails but being re` silient in order that it may return to its normal flat condition`r when bent out of shape, and said attaching means being flexible to permit bending thereof into the desired shape for attachment to said support, and said attaching means being non-resilient to enable it to retain its shape when distorted in the desired manner.

GEORGE H. REIMER. 

